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Control Over WirelessHART Network S. Han, X. Zhu, Al Mok University of Texas at Austin M. Nixon, T. Blevins, D. Chen Emerson Process Management
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Control Over WirelessHART Network

Feb 09, 2016

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Control Over WirelessHART Network. S. Han, X. Zhu, Al Mok University of Texas at Austin. M. Nixon, T. Blevins, D. Chen Emerson Process Management. Research Scope. WirelessHART Stack Development Standard-Compliance Verification Localization-aware Applications - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Control Over WirelessHART Network

S. Han, X. Zhu, Al MokUniversity of Texas at Austin

M. Nixon, T. Blevins, D. ChenEmerson Process Management

Page 2: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Research Scope

2

• WirelessHART Stack Development

• Standard-Compliance Verification

• Localization-aware Applications

• Network Management and Performance Measurement

• Sampling Reduction Techniques and Data Quality Maintenance

• Competition and Collaboration among Protocols in 2.4GHz Band

• Wireless Control

Page 3: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Outline

• Introduction

• Control over WirelessHART network– Control in the Host– Control in the Gateway– Control in the field

• Prototype System and Experiments

• Future Works

3

Page 4: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Introduction• The history of controlling a process plant is

also a history of reducing the number of wires in the industrial plant.

• Applications in process plants– Class C: applications for monitoring– Class B: applications for control– Class A: applications for safety

4

Auxiliary

Critical

The current wireless adoption is at the Class C level.

Page 5: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Introduction (Cont.)

• Control Spectrum in Industrial Plant

• Critical Issues when control goes wireless– Security: open air communication– Reliability: wireless is inherently unreliable– Safety: the topmost concern in a process plant– Speed: Is the speed of WirelessHART enough?– Battery Longevity: replace the battery is costly

5

Supervisory Open Loop Close Loop Critical

Page 6: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Control over WirelessHART Network

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• Control in the Host– the control module runs in the host’s Function Block

Application

• Control in the Gateway– Gateway needs a function block application layer to allow

configuration and execution of control modules.

• Control in the field– A device supports a set of function blocks.

Page 7: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Control in Host vs. Control in GW

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• Control in Host– No change to the gateway– Drawback: further communication delay between GW and the Host.

The longer the loop delay is, the worse the control performance.

• Control in the Gateway– Gateway needs to be enhanced with the control modules. – A deterministic schedule is established for all communications by the

network manager.– Function block execution may be fully synchronized with IO

communication.– Gateways may be fully redundant.

Page 8: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Control in GW vs. FF Approach

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• Control implementation is independent of field device manufacturer. All function blocks are available for use in any control strategy.

• Field devices only need to address measurement/ actuation and communication – minimizing power consumption, simplifying design.

• Control strategy may be fully backed up using redundant gateways.

• The DCS interface to the function block application is simplified since all blocks reside in one device.

• The field devices EDD is very similar to that required for wired HART devices – making it easy for manufacturers to engineer.

Page 9: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

What about Control-in-the-Field?

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• WirelessHART has all of the core features required to support control-in-the-field– Secure peer-to-peer communications– Publish/subscribe capability– Synchronized communications– Fully defined user layer

• WirelessHART is highly optimized and robust– Exception reporting– Mesh behavior

Page 10: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Peer-to-Peer Communications • Devices are allocated a peer-to-peer session

• Network Manager allocates routes and communication resources to achieve reliable and real-time peer-to-peer communications

Measurement in Transmitter Control in Valve

WirelessHART Gateway

Controller

AIOUT

PIDOUT

AOOUT

ININ

IN

BCAL_IN

BCAL_OUTSP

Raw Measurement

Target Position

Actual Position

Publisher Subscriber

Page 11: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Cons of Control-in-the-Field

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• Force device manufactures to understand control

• Inconsistent implementations of function blocks

• Inconsistent sets of function blocks in devices

• Power Saving Concerns– running function blocks in devices increases battery usage by up

to 3x– running function blocks in controller or GW + leveraging

exception reporting techniques reduces battery usage in devices by up to 20x

Page 12: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

WirelessHART Prototype System

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Major Components in the prototype :

• Network Manager• Gateway• Host Application• Access Point• Field Device• Sniffer

PC Side

Embedded Side

Page 13: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Overall Design of the System

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Page 14: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Concrete Overview of the System

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Network Manager Gateway Host Application

Sniffer Access Points

Page 15: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Design of the Gateway

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Page 16: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Experiment Setup

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• Network Topology• Gateway + Network Manager• Access Point• Sensor + Actuator

• Control Loop• Sensor publishes the primary value

every 4 seconds• When gateway receives the sensor data,

the Function Block Application issues command 79 to the actuator

Page 17: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Experiment Setup

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Network Manager Gateway Host Application

Sniffer

SensorActuator

Access Point

Publishing

Control

Page 18: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Experiment Environment

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• Emerson Process Management Office Building– A lot of non-WirelessHART traffic such as Wi-Fi, Bluetooth.– Nine active WirelessHART networks around

Page 19: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Experimental Results

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• The test runs for almost 2 hours• Gateway received 1651 burst messages from the sensor• Not a single packet loss is recorded

Page 20: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Observations from Experiments

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• WirelessHART Supports Control– Experiment is built with actual WirelessHART device, gateway,

and network manager– The environment is noisy– The communication is reliable

• Fastest Loop Achievable?– In theory, we can achieve a 20ms loop period– Two adjacent timeslots are used for publishing and control

respectively

Page 21: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Conclusion

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• Challenges in introducing wireless into industrial process control

• Comparisons among three approaches for control over WirelessHART networks

• A prototype WirelessHART system for evaluating the performance of control in Gateway approach

Page 22: Control Over  WirelessHART  Network

Future Work

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• Measure the jitters in different setups

• Test the fastest loop supported in WirelessHART

• Build a real demo kit